Secretariat Hosted by the World Health Organization and Board Chaired ad interim by Ms Preeti Sudan, Government of India
PMNCH Strategy and Finance
Committee
Anders Nordstrom
PMNCH 23rd Board Meeting
9-11 July 2019, The Hague
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Strategy and Finance Committee’s main tasks
Board proposed to combine roles of the existing Finance Committee and the Ad Hoc Strategy Group into a single “Strategy and Finance Committee”
Strategic issues:
▪ Identification and elaboration of long- and short-term strategic issues and PMNCH priorities for improving WCAH and the attainment of the SDG 3, including those relevant to the EWEC Global Strategy
▪ PMNCH’s added value and strategic focus as a partnership, and how this can be articulated to the broader global community and thus reflected in the Partnership’s forthcoming 2021 to 2025 Strategic Plan and subsequent Business Plans
▪ How PMNCH can be used as a platform to advocate for a greater flow of resources globally, and better alignment of those resources, to support women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health globally
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Strategy and Finance Committee’s main tasks
Operational issues:
▪ Review and provide advice on the overall strategic and operational approaches to PMNCH’s annual workplans, in the context of the overarching Business Plans and Strategic Plans
▪ Advise the leadership of the PMNCH Secretariat on resource mobilization strategies and best practice to secure adequate funding
▪ Review the annual PMNCH financial report as certified by WHO, as the host agency, and findings of WHO generated financial audits and reports, as may become available
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Members of the Committee
Name Organization Role / ConstituencyAnders Nordström Government of Sweden ChairAngela Chaudhuri Swasti Health Catalyst Non-Governmental OrganizationsAnneka Ternald
KnutssonUNFPA United Nations Agencies
Anuradha Gupta GAVI Global Financing MechanismsEnes Efendioğlu Civil Life Association Adolescents & YouthTBD TBD Private sector
Johannah PhumaphiAfrican Leaders Malaria
AllianceInter-Governmental Organizations
Julia Bunting Population CouncilAcademic, Research and Training
Institutes
Nosa OrobatonBill & Melinda Gates
FoundationDonors and Foundations
TBD TBD Partner Governments
Zulfiqar BhuttaSickKids, Centre for Global
Child Health
Healthcare Professional
Associations
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Key issues discussed to date
▪ Progress report on 2019 workplan
▪ 2018 certified Financial Report
▪ Supporting the Secretariat in resource mobilization efforts
▪ WCAH in a changing landscape
▪ Political Engagement
▪ Advocacy for ensuring that WCAH is included in UHC
▪ PMNCH knowledge related products
▪ PMNCH Digital Strategy
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Women, Children and Adolescents’ health in a shifting landscape and global agendas
We are living longer – but we are not getting healthier at the same rate
Large differences between
and within countries• The individual’s health is affected by their lifestyle and
environment they live in, ie the determinants of health.
• The poorest billion of the population does not have any real access to health care if all barriers are considered, including the risk of catastrophic health expenditures.
• Negative developments of health is seen most clearly in countrieswith humanitarian disasters.
• Within SRHR there are major deficiencies and inequalitiesregarding peoples’ access to services and information.
• Clear link between discrimination, lack of respect for human rightsand unequal access to health care.
72 yrsPeople are living longer:
72 years on average
compared with 62 years 40
years ago.
5.6 m The number of children
that die before their fifth
birthday decreased
from 12.7 million to 5.6
million between 1990
och 2015.
• Under five child mortality has decreased globally, althoughlarge differences exist between countries:
• In Sub-Saharan Africa 1 child in 13 dies before its 5th birthday while the corresponding figure in high-incomecountries is 1 child in 189.
• Today four countries account for almost 50% of childdeaths (under 5 mortality): India, Pakistan, Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
• The number of maternal deaths decreased from 532 000 to 303 000 between 1990 and 2015. 99 per cent of maternalmortality occurs in low- and middle-income countries.
• Unsafe abortions are among the top 5 most common causes of maternal death globally with large regional differences.
Positive but uneven development
in child and maternal mortality
NCDs are increasing –
esp in LICs and MICs
• Cardiovascular disease is the largest cause of death
globally and in Sweden. (54% of all deaths).
• The number of people living with diabetes is
increasing globally but most rapidly in LICs and MICs
• Mental illness is a global health problem. About 300
million people in the world have at some time in their
life suffered from depression. More women than men
are affected.
• Globally suicide is the second most common cause of
death among young people (15- 29 years).
Incidence of communicable
diseases is decreasing but
sustained efforts are needed
• An est. of 36.7 million people in the world live with HIV. 70%
are aware of their disease and more than half are of ART,
which is why AIDS mortality has decreased considerably.
• The no. of new HIV cases in the sexually active population has
stabilised at around 1.7 million per year. There has been no
marked increase in the last 5 years.
• Tuberculosis is no longer as common globally, but one person
in four in the world still has tuberculosis and it is the ninth most
common cause of death.
• After declining for many years, malaria incidence has now
halted at around 216 million cases and 455 000 annual deaths.
In some regions prevalence has risen again. Only half of the
population in endemic regions has access to mosquito nets
15 million people are dying prematurely
(<70 yrs) globally.
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Global maternal and cervical cancer mortality
Sources: Globocan, 2008Pistani et al, Estimates of worldwide mortality from 25 cancers in 1990. Int J Cancer 1999 83(1) 18-29WHO UNICEF UNFPA and World Bank, Trends in maternal mortality: 1990-2010
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Global Deaths related to High Body-mass Index
1990 2.2 million deaths
20154.0 million deaths
Cardiovascular Disease Chronic Kidney DiseaseCancers Diabetes Mellitus
Nu
mb
er
De
ath
s (
millio
n)
Body-mass Index Body-mass Index
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Drivers of Change in Deaths related to High BMI (1990-2015)
Total percent change Change due to population ageing
Change due to population growth
Change due to risk exposure
Change due to risk−deleted mortality rate
Risk factors:
Lifestyle, food, physical activity
• Tobacco kills more than 7 million people each year.
About 80% of 1.1 billion smokers live in LICs and MICs,
where the burden of tobacco-related diseases is highest.
• Alcohol is the cause of 1/3 of the global ill health and 11
% of global deaths, despite the fact the half of the world’s
population does not consume alcohol.
• Obesity has surpassed malnutrition as a global risk factor
and cause of death the past decade.
• Trafic accidents are the 10th most common cause of death
and a major societal problem in many countries.
25%Physical inactivity causes
one fourth of all breast and
colon cancers, diabetes and
cardiovascular diseases.
Risk factors:
Pollution and chemicals
• It is est. That 9 out of 10 people in the world breathe
air that is harmful to their health. Air pollution
(indoor and outdoor) leads to 7 million
premature deaths each year.
• Dangerous chemicals affect human health. Some
chemicals can cause acute poisoning and death;
others have effects that appear many years after
exposure, e.g. cancer or reproductive impacts, and
some can be transferred from mother to child during
pregnancy and breast feeding. 16% Of the world’s total deaths, 16 per
cent is caused by pollution and is
also a major cause of ill health.
Global health threats
• Antimicrobial resistance, and esp. Antibiotic
resistance, is a transboundary and multi-sectoral
threat which is on the increase globally.
• Population density and increased mobility
creates the conditions for pandemics.
• Weak and fragmented health systems that
lack the capacity to manage large epidemics.
11 310 The number of people that lost their lives in the
world’s largest ebola outbreak in western
Africa between 2013 – 2016.
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GLOBAL
FOR HEALTHY
LIVES AND
WELL-BEING
FOR ALL
TOWARDS A
PLANACTION
19
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We must accelerate progress if we want to reach the health-related SDGs targets
▪ The world is off-track to achieve the health-related SDGs by 2030
▪ Progress made has been uneven and too many people are still being left behind
▪ Business as usual will not get us far and fast enough to meet the goals of the 2030 Agenda – TIME TO ACT IS NOW
The multilateral system must join forces to more effectively support countries
CONTEXT
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COMMITMENT
Accelerated progress
towards the health-related
SDGs
Align: We will align programmatic, financing and operational policies, approaches and methodologies where it can enhance efficiency and effectiveness.
Accelerate: We are identifying where we can accelerate progress. We are scaling up collective action approaches for key cross-cutting “accelerators”
Account: We are enhancing our joint accountability for delivering collective results for people.
Strengthened support to
national actors to drive
SDG acceleration
“We commit to align our joined-up efforts with country priorities and needs, to accelerate progress by leveraging new ways of working together and unlocking innovative approaches, and account for our contribution to progress in a more transparent and engaging way.”
We are developing a cohesive and coherent plan to support national efforts towards SDG3+.
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ACCELERATE
7 cross-cutting areas where more innovative, synergistic efforts can significantly accelerate progress towards the health-related SDGs.
1. Sustainable financing2. Primary health care3. Community and civil society engagement4. Determinants of health5. R&D, innovation and access6. Data and digital health7. Innovative programming in fragile and vulnerable
states and for disease outbreak response
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Utrikesdepartementet23
Mission
Strategic
Priorities
(and goals)
Strategic
shifts
Orgaiiza-tional
shifts
Promote health – keep the world safe – serve the vulnerable
Ensuring healthy lives and promoting well-being for all at all ages by :
Achieving universal health coverage – 1 billion more people benefitting from universal health coverage Addressing health emergencies – 1 billion more people better protected from health emergencies
Promoting healthier populations – 1 billion more people enjoying better health and well-being
Stepping up leadership–
diplomacy and advocacy;
gender equality, health equity and human
rights; multisectoral
action; finance
Focus global public goods on impact– normative
guidance and agreements;
data, research and innovation
▪ Measure impact to be accountable and manage for results
▪ Reshape operating model to drive country, regional and global impacts
▪ Transform partnerships, communications and financing to resource the
strategic priorities
▪ Strengthen critical systems and processes to optimize organizational
performance
▪ Foster culture change to ensure a seamless, high-performing WHO
Drive public health impact in every country–
differentiated approach based on capacity and vulnerability
Policy
dialogue
–to develop
systems of
the future
Strategic
support
–to build high
performing
systems
Technical
assistance
–to build
national
institutions
Service
delivery–to
fill critical
gaps in
emergencies
Mature health system Fragile health system
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The Global Strategy (GS) adopted by Every Woman Every Child (EWEC) defines three overarching objectives:
Survive or end preventable deaths, Thrive or ensure health and well-being throughout the life time, and
Transform or expand enabling environments.
Questions for discussion relating to PMNCH as an extensive partnership;
1. Should PMNCH more proactively highlight work relating to the growing burden of NCDs
including mental health for women, children and adolescents as part of the Thrive objective? And by
doing so seek opportunities to work more beyond the health sector addressing the main societal risk
factors and vulnerability? If yes, how?
2. Should PMNCH evolve is capacity and competences around the broader determinants of
women’s, children’s and adolescents’ health and wellbeing (social including education, political,
environmental, commercial)
3. Should PMNCH work more specifically and differently from today on issues of special importance for
women, children and adolescent health related to sustainable and resilient health systems e.g
linked to UHC, PHC, financing or human resources for health? If yes, which one and how?
4. Should PMNCH use even more of a human rights approach to its work and the importance of
empowerment of women and girls and the rights of children? If yes, how to identify manageable
deliveries?
5. Given a broader agenda (potentially yes to all three questions above), how should PMNCH ensure the
continued support for and work on the unfinished MDG agenda and SRHR?
i.e not only the secretariat but the work and potential of all partner organisations